Monthly Archives: September 2018

memoirs of walking the leeds & liverpool canal (2)

a canal wanderer

memoirs of walking the leeds and liverpool canal (2)

Introduction

Back in July 2016 our ambition was to walk the whole of the Leeds and Liverpool Canal (in stages of course). I also had planned to walk the Leigh, Rufford and Springs Branches. It was an exciting challenge to have had that opportunity to learn about the industrial and social heritage along the canal and be swept away with the beautiful Pennines countryside.

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chilli chicken (it’s all happening on hercule)

cookery chat with david & sandra biddle

6: chilli chicken

The months just fly by when you are having fun, and that’s just what we have been doing as we have been getting used to our new boat. Moving to a smaller 41ft boat I thought it would have been an easy challenge, but how wrong could I be. Our old beast of a boat was a 58ft heavy and solid Dutch Barge style narrow boat and you basically pointed her in the direction she wanted to go and she went – rain or shine, windy or calm.

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the pirate boat

old no. 38

the pirate boat

So - imagine the scenario. You’ve been enjoying your holibobs in the Lake District, far away from old bridge number 38 and you get a message on your phone from something called, ‘The Pirate Boat.’

‘Ahoy there! - Meet me at Botany Bay.’

Well I don’t know about you, but I was intrigued.

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bloke down the pub said…

dawncraft chronicles

bloke down the pub said...time to service the outboard!

I am very protective of mine. It might only be a second-hand Honda 8 with very faded silver cowling and the remains of a broken tiller handle still attached. However, its purpose is to push the boat along with out dramas.

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waterways chaplains are coming alongside you!

our waterways chaplain

waterways chaplains are coming alongside you!

When the first moves were made to begin a chaplaincy for the benefit of people who live on and around our canals no one could have imagined how effective it would prove.

Now in operation for around ten years Chaplains are a growing ‘presence’, being noticed and recognised as a part of the British waterway scene.

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weighed yourself recently?

dawncraft chronicles

weighed yourself recently?

Since my last article I arrived at the boat to find my well used and abused Honda 9 outboard had been stolen.

OK maybe I could have been more security conscious even though I am in a marina, but this must be weighed up by the damage that a determined thief possibly stealing to order can inflict on a plywood interior. Also, the cost of adding £500 outboard to the insurance policy. One must write it down to experience. Still a nice comforting pamphlet on being the victim of crime later and we are back at square one. We need power.

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revisiting the tidal trent

pictures worth a thousand words

revisiting the tidal trent, cromwell to torksey - lincoln and boston

The Tidal Trent

We first ventured onto the tidal Trent during our inaugural six-month narrowboating experience in 2009. Naively, we had little idea of the challenges of navigating a tidal river. Though to be fair, Barry says he did. As a laid-back Kiwi, unlike me, he rarely worries or over-thinks. I vividly recall being confronted by a gigantic gravel barge sitting low in the water as I turned a corner. Thankfully for us (though sad for the industries they supported), the gravel barges stopped navigating the river in 2013, the year we returned to England.

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